AGGREGATE, in botany, is a term used to express those flowers, which are composed of parts or florets, so united by means either of the receptacle or calyx, that no one of them can be taken away without destroying the form of the whole. They are opposed to simple flowers, which have no such common part, and are usually divided into seven kinds, viz. the aggregate, properly so called, whose receptacle is dilated, and whose florets are supported by foot-stalks; such are the blue daisy, thistle, or sea-pink, &c.; the compound; the umbellati; the cymose; the amentaceous; the glomerati; and the spadicous.